You Are The Product | Tech Talk Today 91
Posted on: November 13, 2014

Data Breaches often result in the companies attacked playing the victim & shrugging off responsible network management.
Samsung reveals new VR gear, a 3D camera with 16 HD cameras & a bunch of other goodies that promise to bring the virtual world to you.
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Samsung unveils Project Beyond, a 3D-capturing camera for Gear VR
Samsung has just unveiled a sneak preview of a new camera called Project Beyond, which is a 3D-capturing 360-degree camera designed to capture videos and stream them on the Gear VR. Pranav Mistry, Samsung’s VP of Research, says that Beyond is a “new kind of camera that gives a new kind of immersive experience.” The camera (which apparently houses 16 full HD cameras) shows a 360-degree panoramic view and captures everything in 3D, collecting a gigapixel of 3D data every second. It promises high-speed connectivity, adaptive stitching, ultra wide-angle optics and stereoscopic depth. And, this isn’t just a concept. It’s actually a fully working device.
Samsung launching Gear VR ‘Innovator Edition’ in early December for $199 | The Verge
You’ll be able to get your hands on Samsung’s Gear VR in early December. Today the company announced that it will launch the Gear VR Innovator Edition — essentially what amounts to developer preview hardware (that’s available to everyone) — next month.
Gear VR: $199 for the headset alone, or $249 with one of Samsung’s Bluetooth gamepads. Add that to the cost of a Note 4 — $700 or more, unsubsidized — and it’s not one of the cheaper VR headsets on the market.
91% of US adults say consumers have lost control over how their personal info is collected and used by companies | Pew Research
Some 43% of adults have heard “a lot” about “the government collecting information about telephone calls, emails, and other online communications as part of efforts to monitor terrorist activity,” and another 44% have heard “a little.” Just 5% of adults in our panel said they have heard “nothing at all” about these programs.
Widespread concern about surveillance by government and businesses
Perhaps most striking is Americans’ lack of confidence that they have control over their personal information. That pervasive concern applies to everyday communications channels and to the collectors of their information—both in the government and in corporations. For example:
- 91% of adults in the survey “agree” or “strongly agree” that consumers have lost control over how personal information is collected and used by companies.
- 88% of adults “agree” or “strongly agree” that it would be very difficult to remove inaccurate information about them online.
- 80% of those who use social networking sites say they are concerned about third parties like advertisers or businesses accessing the data they share on these sites.
- 70% of social networking site users say that they are at least somewhat concerned about the government accessing some of the information they share on social networking sites without their knowledge.